Peake v. Jamison
This text of 82 Mo. 552 (Peake v. Jamison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In its opinion delivered in this cause, the court of appeals correctly states the case as follows: “ Hard-[555]*555age Lane died in 1849, leaving a will whereby he devised, all his estate, real and personal, to Henry G. Soulard and Thomas T. Gantt in trust for the benefit of his two children,, under certain limitations and restrictions. In 1860, Soulard and Gantt surrendered their trust and William M. Cook, was appointed their successor. In 1863, Cook was removed from the trusteeship and the defendant appointed in his-stead. This suit is founded upon charges that the trustees, Soulard and Gantt, had willfully and unlawfully allowed certain delinquent tax bills to accrue and accumulate upon lands belonging to the trust estate, and that Cook had been guilty of like mismanagement so that losses accrued to the estate amounting to $3,783.88 together with other sums in interest, costs and expenses, all of which could have been recovered by the defendant against his predecessors and. their sui’eties, but that defendant never demanded, sued for, or recovered the same as he ought to have done, so that by reason of his willful neglect in that regard he had been, guilty of a breach of his said trust and became liable to-plaintiffs as surviving beneficiaries to pay said losses. It is. also charged that in his annual settlement for the year 1871 defendant charged and was allowed $1,500 for attorneys’ fees paid in and about certain litigation in which the estate-was interested for services rendered by the partnership firm whereof defendant was a member in addition to commissions charged and received by him on account of the matter involved in the same proceedings. The petition prays-that defendant be compelled to account for and pay over to the use of plaintifis the said several sums of money, that-his settlement heretofore made be set aside, that his accounts bo referred to a master lor examination and report, and that defendant be removed from the trust.”
In addition to that statement it may be added that defendant, in his answer, alleged that at the October term, 1857, of the St; Louis land court, Gantt and Soulard instituted a suit against L. Ilardage Lane and Elizabeth O. Peakeai.d her husband Samuel II. Peake, for the-purpose of being; [556]*556■discharged from said trust and that said defendants appeared and filed their answer in said cause which was tried in said court on the 25th of June, 1858, and a decree rendered re■quiring said trustees to file in said court a full, true and perfect account of their trusteeship with vouchers thereof and ■on the 19th day of January, 1860, there was a change of -venue in said cause to the St. Louis circuit court and on the ■30th of April 1860, the trustees filed in, said court a full, true -and perfect account of their trusteeship with vouchers and the court found that there was then flue to said trustees $2,-■019.40 and rendered a decree that said account stand firm and effectual lor ever between said parties, that said trustees recover of said defendants said sum of $2,019.40, and that G-antt and Soulard be discharged and released as trustees and Cook ■appointed in their stead. The answer further alleged that ■said Hardage Lane and Elizabeth Peake and her husband instituted a suit in the St. Louis circuit court against "William Cook in September, 1862, to have him removed as trustee and that pending said suit, it was agreed between this defendant and the plaintiffs in said suit, in writing, that if this defendant would serve as trustee he should be allowed ■six per cent commission on all sums of money which should pass through his hands, clear and free of all expenses such .as commissions for collecting rents, selling real estate and attorneys’ fees. That under that agreement the circuit court appointed this defendant trustee. That said written .agreement has been lost or misplaced and cannot be found, that the services for which said attorneys’ fee was charged were rendered in a suit to recover a tract of land belonging to said estate and that after a long and persistent litigation ■defendant recovered said land and realized from it for the ■estate $14,254.70.
It was agreed that the statements in defendant’s answer were true, except the allegation of the contract for fees and the execution of said paper alleged to be lost. On a hearing of the cause there was a finding for defendant :and plaintiffs’ bill was dismissed. On appeal to the court [557]*557of appeals this judgment was affirmed, and appellants have' appealed to this court. The plaintiffs are the heirs at law of L. Hardage Lane and his sister Elizabeth Peake who were the sole heirs of Hardage Lane. L. Hardage Lane died leaving no issue and the plaintiffs are the children of his sister, Mrs. Peake, who departed this life before the: institution of this suit.
So far as the alleged misconduct of Gantt and Soulard is concerned the judgment of the St. Louis land court in the suit of Gantt and Soulard against L. Hardage Lane and Mrs. Peake and her husband precludes any inquiry into that matter. That court had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matter of the litigation. All the parties interested wore before the court and a settlement was required by the trustees in that proceeding and it was made and passed upon by the court, and yet after the lapse of twenty years these plaintiffs seek to go behind that judgment to-investigate alleged misconduct of these trustees resulting, in a loss to the estate. The matter was res adjudicatei. If any misconduct on the part of Gantt and Soulard had occurred that was the time and the occasion to investigate it. Their liabilities to the estate on account of their trusteeship was the very subject under investigation. This defendant could not have gone behind that judgment to charge Gantt and Soulard for moneys lost to the estate by their negligence which occurred, if at all, before that judgment-was rendered.
"With regard to the alleged misconduct- of Cook it is sufficient to say that the evidence proved that when defendant learned that the taxes on the land for the year 1860 had not been paid by Cook, Cook and his security Henry Yon Pliul were both insolvent and a suit against them would have been unavailing.
The only remaining question which we deem it necessary to notice relates to the charges of' $1,500 as attorneys’ fees. It was alleged in the answer that it was agreed by L. Hardage Lane and his sister and her husband with this de~ [558]*558■fendaut that if he would accept the trust in addition to his commission he should have extra pay for any services as attorney. Defendant testifies positively to the execution and substance of the agreement and the only witness on the other side was Samuel II. Peake, father of plaintiff, who testified that he had no recollection of signing such a paper. That he was out of the State at its date. In corroboration of defendant’s testimony in October, 1871, he filed a settlement as trustee in the circuit court of St. Louis in the case of said L. II. Lane and Samuel II. and Elizabeth Peake against William Cook in which the said $1,500 attorneys’ fees were credited and allowed by that court. We have not noticed other questions discussed by the court of .appeals in its opinion and in briefs of counsel because we do not think it necessary to a decision of this cause.
The judgment is affirmed.
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